TITE bREGOX DAILY JQOTyjUW POOTLAyp, ' SATUBPAY EVEmXQ; OCT0BEH . 1 8, 1002. 9 IN SANTO DOMINGO ........... v. g - I Ji Portion of th "East of tho Mountalns'Reglon Thai Pro ducts Millions. By PJtVL DoLJISEY. CONTRIBUTED "BY DJtVID 8. ' OGDEN. PUBLICATION COMf Sheep- Science Uoe Oreg'bii Desert Land Colombo; Chose for His Home ; - Where His Remains Are Laid. , Mint-K run OREGON, of th9 -FIRST CHURCH; OF CHRIST, a 1 ' .r-' . SCIENTIST. - . v.. - " NOTE. The region described by Mr. De Laney In th following - article Is In Its Southeastern part of the state and Is entirely distinct In characteristics from ' th other portions from which com' mil ' Hons of mineral products, million of - bushels of wheat, hundreds of thousands (A1 dollars' worth of fruit. In which are rich farms that have attained somewhat sf 'diversified method, and dairying la de Velopod to the proportions of a great In ' eustry. The majority of the people of - Eastern Oregon llvs In ths other produc tive localities, the "desert" described by Mr. De Laney being sparcsly settled. Editor. , Ths sheep Industry of Interior, or Southeastern, Oregon is carried on la . ... a" different manner from that of any other , . place In the world. ; ; , ; i. ; ' ' f This applies mors especially to Crook, Lake, Harney and Malheur Counties. Near the line between Lake and Harney Coun ties stands a high peak designated on ths " snaps as Ram's Peak, but "known through- , lout the desert as Wagrontlre Mountain. This mountain, geographically and topo . " graphically, occupies . ths center of the exeat Oregon desert To the east of this peak lies sv vast section of country, sur , rounding Juniper and Little Juniper Mountains, extending to the rlmrocks Overlooking Warner Lake and Abort Lake on the south, Stein's Mountain to -the : - east, Malheur's Lake to the east and to the west and southwest covering .the ' Section bordering the Paisley, Summer Lake and Silver Lake countries. X Ths Wlntsr Rang, . This great scope of country, containing - millions or acres, is called the Winter f Bangs by the sheepmen living adjacent to It. It Is not adapted to anything else. .' Its location, its altitude, the growth of . -wegetatlon. where there ts vegetation, all . iv eo to make it the-sheepman's - winter range. It Is a barren w ast of rocks, and, sagebrush, a short stubby grass and , marauded over by jackrabblts and coy ,, otea. There Is so water there for man or beast either winter or summer, but in -, the winter ths snow falls along the moun , tains bordering the desert and lies there until spring-. Upon this sheep, horses and men are sustained. The desert country lies at a low altl- tude, so tnueh below the . surrounding ' country that snow never . lies on the ground, melting as soon as It strikes the : ground. Just sufficient moisture is left to sustain ths stubby gnus that grows) as roots or tea sag and wiregrass. Destitute In Summer. In summer no living thins; can survive tier. As soon as the spring sun begins to appear the snow melts from the mountain Ides, the grass becomes parched on the . desert, great dust whirlwinds roam ths barren wastes and. man and beast must - seek the valleys In ths far-away moun- tains for sustenance. And the men do not . know thin any setter, than the sheep. By. the first of April the sheep begin to turn " jthetr -course toward 4i mountains and valleys, where lies what Is known as the summer range, and nothing but. the skillful work of the herder and his dog can keep them from over-exerting them- selves In leaving this country, which they now. fie from as If It were plague stricken. But when fall comes they turn away from the exhausted summer range in the Valleys and mountains and rush for the Winter range and again have to be re strained to keep them from traveling too far each day, - Traveling Back and Fourth. : Many of them are driven hundreds of . miles twice a season, none of them, less or at the foot of a mountain, where the now Is sheltered and kept from melting. . The sheep start out on the morning and jr night are very thirsty. As they are driven . Into camp about dusk ''they rush than a hundred miles, and the wlnte .'. and summer ranges and the travel be- tween them aad the manner of conveying provisions and, salt into the desert, and establishing supply-houses and preparing places in which to live are managed with : as much skill and regularity as the best equipped railroad system in the country. - Few sheep equips are established within - less than a hundred miles" of the nearest human habitation and this necessitates .-..triple provision for both man and heas have ssJCSaen must TOuaVy clothing . and sqbstantial food, and wen there are guns and ammunition, medicines and a . hundred other things needed in spend- - ing half of ths year outside of clvllixa- .. tlon. LEPROSY CONQUERED " " BBBMSSBSaWaSSSMSSaeMBBBeSBBa .'. . Vienna. Doctor Claims to Have jl; SoJyclJtsJlFStery,,...- ITS CURE DECLARED POSSIBLE Baths- and Mastag Ar Features of th t, Treatment Detailed , Report of th ' Treatment Have Been Sent to Wash- ington The Seoret of th Reported j -New Cure for That Most Loathsome 'f0t All Dlsssses. . 1 'X cur for leprosy, that terrible dlse& , which heretofore has known no conquer ; W, has been announced by -Robert Mo Wad. United . States Consul at Canton. Mr. McVade-was one of the -passengers who arrived by the CP. R. at earner Tar tar on Saturday afternoon, and in an in terview he tells ot the successful results Of the experiments conducted In the leper colonies In th East by Dr. Raxing, of Vienna. If , true, this cur will revolu tionise a theory of medloal science, which has hl& that leprosy was incurable. Dr. 1 Raslag has been for some time connected -with th United States army corps in the Philippines, and entrusted to Mr. Mo AVsde th particulars of the cure. Th consul stated the doctor had In deed found the cur aad that th whole particulars wer 'consigned to Washing ton in hi cane, describing the discovery tad th results: "Fourteen cases wer lrat4 with ucoesa by. Dr. Rails at 1 It Is estimated that more than 1,000,000 sheep are wintered on this range every year. These represent owners in the sur rounding counties. Each band Is ranged ton .different territory,, and by a sort ot common law' right every owner knows hi territory and that of the others, so that few ever tresspass on one another's rights. Each owner has one or more out fits. This outfit consists of from 1000 to 7000 sheep a herder, a camptender, or or more dogs, five to seven horses, an "ark" and often a light spring wagon. The "ark" Is fitted Inside like a house. It is simply'a miniature house built on an ordinary set of wagon-wheels. It con tains a cooking-stove, dining-table,, gun racks, bed, and has a basement below containing two or three weeks' provisions. Two to four horses are bitched to the "ark" in traveling from place 'to place and one Is kept for going oh errands, or used as a packhorse. Each outfit occupies a large area of country, being moved from place to place as one division of the range Is grazed low and given' time to recuper ate. ' An ordinary ' "ark" will not contain more than two or three weeks' supplies, and for this reason there must be a re source to draw from. Supply-House In the Desert. Supplies are usually stored at various points In the desert. Traveling in and out, .and from pla.ee to place, necessitates V . A CAMP JEN DER'8 WAGON ON THE DESERT. this. Owing to the long distance to tim ber and th dearth of good roads, build ing of any kind is very expensive. For this reason the sheepmen generally Club together and build shacks at given points Within a day's ride , or drive from the central portion of the range. These are stored full of provisions, salt . and grain, at the o-enlng of the season, and to this pohrt wren -come with pack-horses and in spring wagons and convey supplies into th Interior. These- supply houses are never locked, the doors merely being fas tened by a rope or string, and while they contain flour, sugar, coffee, hams, lard, baoon and everything In the way of sub stantial provisions, they are as safe thera as if under the strongest lock and key tn civilisation. ' Everybody Welcome-- . . -s "Travelers, whetherHtey be sheepmen or not, passing hat way, are welcome to help themselves, and if they are short on provisions may take what they need with them, yet It is claimed that this privi lege has never been abused. From these supply - shacks the "arks" are " kept re plenished from time to time through the winter. Winter Range "Water." The visitor to one of the desert sheep camps Is more Interested In the manner In which the horses and sheep take to the "water" than any other feature of camp lire. Tne camp is always In some jpijch a retiso. unis is Me only ,n.- ,h Lhav of securing water, a, , , liking it as well as la It. liquid "HorBM aISO take t0 v 00 mis element it readlf "J3a "Water" in s Qunnysack. -r.rv. . IitYs amusing to hear the camptender re quest th border to bring gom..wa5r ana; see the herder take up a gunnysack and go to a clean pile of snow on the moun tain aide and shovel it full of snow and bring it in on his back. The snow Is then melted and kept cool with" other snow and the men get to liking it as well as do the' animals. Canton. The viceroy, who Is my personal friend, had some new houses a hospital, as it were specially built for Dr. Razlag, and the people upon whom the doctor operated were there segregated from their fellows, and no communication al- tofj&MJ&m- - ' THE LEPER CAST "OUT. Dr. Raslag was given no help, and de frayed all expenses of food, medicine. etc.; from his own pocket, for none of the friends of the leper ever offer any as sistance after the disease breaks out, as the Chinese leper is an outeast. His peo ple, relatives and friends, cast him out, and Dr. Razlag, In order to continue his experiments, was able tb get a number of typical cases where the disease had been well advanced, and with fourteen patients under constant treatment, be de veloped his discovery, which' will mak another mark in the discoveries of the country. In each case the disease soon manftested an Improvement and In one of the worst cases that of a Chinese coolie between 30 and 40 years of age. the ad vancement was very marked." This .man, who had been a powerful coolie, had been bent double with paralysis, as a result of the inroads Of leprosy, and was obliged as a result of the disease to walk using his hands, practically on all fours, but as a result of the treatment of Dr. Razlag . this man is now completely re covered, aa srtalght as any of his fel lows and can carry aa heavy a load as ever he coult.'V THE SECRET IS SENT. Mr. McWad said he was carrying full particulars of the . great discovery, in which th United States is much interest ed, with Its large leper colony at1 Mol okal, to Washington, -and will make a lengthy report covering all details of the' subjects Xi,msU I -'-' ' The winters are long and lonely. Sav the bleating of sheep day and night, ths howling of the coyote and bis raids on the sheep, the snowstorm on the moun tains and the mists on the desert, there j Is but little, day or night, to change the monotony. Occasionally a visitor Comes along a trapper or another sheepman. When they do, then there is a Jollification. The greatest difficulty with the visitor is to get sway. The camptender and the herdpr soon get ' accustomed to each other and learn all that tHvtber knows, and t bey long for fresh eoterpany. When a visitor comes they entertain him roy ally for a sheep camp. Card playing oc cupies the"Mght until late inside the ark, where a stove is kept red hot for warmth. Next day a hunt hy the camp tender' and visitor generally secures on antelope. Then night again comes on, and toward the end of the visit, and when it is thought he can be kept no longer, the hidden bottle, only fit for kings In the desert, Is drawn forth and ho Is Invited to drink. He is welcome to spend weeks with them without cost, and hU- departure Is always sad.. To the sheepmen It is like losing a relative or bosom friend forever. Breaking Camp. But the Ions winter finally passes. Spring comes and with it the warm, sun- ... . ny days. The sheep grow res fleas, and as the days dry out the grass and melt ths snow they become alarmed and start for the home In the valleys and mountains. They reach this point just before lambing time, niul here follows another interest ing feature, after this xomes the shear ing season. All sheeptnen leave the win ter range about the same time, and arrive there about the same time. The cus torn has grown as regular as clock, work. When , they begin to leave the desert In spring one may climb to the top of the adjoining mountains and see through a strong glaas a hundred thousand sheep moving In different directions, In bands of various sizes, leading out toward their respective summer ranges. Friends and a "Good" Tims. I The rrlval of the sheepman from the wfnTCr fane l'ke returning home from a foreign country. He does not think! of his persona1 appearance. His clothing is worn thread?)are. hla shoes are fragments of leather, hl&eard nd hVrrUiveoSl, gro to a long raggSd Vitybrtion an. y he la tanned until It is difficult to tell r hat race he belongs to. But he Is happy, the happ'.jgt of men. Everything looks good to Yiiin. Every body is his friend. is strong in will power, a few ta" of celebration wtU do hlrn$u4 J e gettleg down to -tne reguar v "routine of life, if he Is weak, he goes on a debauch and never sobers up until his moiiey and credit are gone. Frequently, after this state Is reached, if he Is a good herder, some sheepmen will stand good for a haircut and a shave, buy him new overalls and a Jumper and a hat and hob nail shoes and then take hlril on the range again. This Is the life of many, but many. iYea:-ed,4orUne.trojnflhln; in, thft sneep country- and today count their wealth by the thousands and some even by the hundreds of thousands. And ml- Hons of dofars come annually from the runty grass at the foot Of the sage and wire grass on the desert of Eastern Ore gon. covered by Dr. Railag in the report. Tho details were not made known by Consul McWade, but it is understood that tho treatment lies chiefly In massage and fre quent baths1Jjjfreah.aad aatt-w4iv-and medical bathing, with Internal remedies. Lr. Kazlag, who was formerly a promt nent physician of Vienna, went to the Philippines as an officer of the United States medical corps, so that he might be enabled to continue his experiments, on which he has been, working for years. In the treatment of leprous diseases, and he resigned from the United States army corps in order to continue his work at Canton the crowded !ty of Southern China, where lepers are very numerous. Vancouver, B; C, world. RAISING THE WIND. It seems incredible, but is nevertheless a tact, that aa late as ths year 1814, an old woman named Bessie Millie of Po mona, In the , Orkney ' Islands, sold fa vorable winds to , seamen at the small Prtcft of ixpence a-vessel. For many years witches were supposed to sell the wind. The Finlandars and Laplanders mkde auite a trade by selling winds. The old woman, after being well paid by the credulous sailors, used to knit three magical knots. The buyer was told he would have a good gale when he untied the first knot, the, second knot would bring a strong wind and th third a se vere tempest Irish Times. . PROFESSIONAL PRIDE. Ton gave that peelar a whole lot o wrong elcwa. What did you do it for?" asked Bill de burglar. 'Tou hadn't noth ln' to gain by it." T know it," said Muggsy de crook. "It's a heap o" satisfaction te outU a Utc.tiva,"Chloaro Trlhuaay CASTLE COLON STILL STANDS Ths Big Clbo Tree Near the Spring Is Nearly jBOO Years Old. and Thousands ot Its Leave Ar tent to Friends by Vlsltona R very Year The Mystery of tn water Supply. There has always been more or less confusion in the public mind as to the j difference between the two republics of Santo Dominao and Haiti. As a matter of fact they might as well be a thousand miles apart aa far as resemblance Is concerned. Haiti is' French, speaks a French patois and has almost entirely . . 1 1 . . 1 . . V. mnt, ' ,ouV . ' , V.h. lation is almost entirely made up of ths descendants of the slave, brought from nated by the-whites.' has been generally ruled bv .them imi m.t Af th business f h. nh!i 1. . a,, hv them. of the republic is conducted by them, The language is a good Spanish and an almost insuperabf mountain range sepa rates the two republics. Haiti is the "black republic." The other republic is no more so than' Cuba, for the whites rule. It Is therefor at the present time a safe place to visit, even though under a provisional government, one white president having driven out another In tho recent revolution. And thereris no' more interesting place than the capital city, the oldest city on this side of the Atlantic. . .' r THE CASTLE OF COLUMBUS. There it was tnat Columbus was Impris oned, and there th Columbus family sought to make a -home, selecting it as the fairest spot in all ths newly discovered lands. The castle of Colon still stands, a massive and Imposing ruin. But it was never completed and 'never occupied. Its massive walls at th city gate and over looking the river were too formidable in the early days, and it was whispered about that Columbus was to be king, and this was to be his "Impregnable strong hold. It was this story sent back to Spain that made'th tower -tots home- in stead, and the castle built by Diego Columbus was never completed, hy order of the king. Just below it, on the river bank, stands the broad-spreading clbo tree which his tory says Columbus fastened his boats to on his first arrival. It is 600 years old, it is said, and many grow to that age, Many hundreds of - its leaves find their way to all parts of the world, for the casual visitor from th ship In port for the day must tell the story and Inclose leaf from the famous tree In a letter back to friends at home. The Spanish government sanctioned the story during tho Columbian exposition in this country at Chicago by sending a cruiser to take away to Spain two immense boughs bf the tree. What was done with them afterward no -u - in.- un to Domingo knows, but they probably found a place In the exhibit of Spain. Th well of Co-, lumbua stands near the tree, a pool cov ered and surrounded ' by solid masonry, except for the door at one end. The water is fresh, that in the river la brackish for many miles farther up, and the mys tery ot Its freshness ho one is able t explain. PROBABLY A 8PRINQ. There are various atoajaLjjuit the most probable inJtJTTfTl,. imnlv apring, proiectafT h ,. m.mnrf frnm V" 010 I tnatlon to poison the .water whichaTrhlv t)peared ao far show this war to enemy was in tne naDii or aoing. i n i general belief Is that It was piped la some mysterious manner from aome dis tant river. It waa here th water supply for all the ancient vessels was obtained. and no doubt many casks ' of It found their way to Spain. It is open now, and little used except by the younger genera tion, who find It a safe, swimming pool. It is outside of the city wall and entirely too far from the gate to Justify a lazy populace in seeking it for a city supply. Most of the water in dally use come from the cisterns, which are not always clean and contain animal life ' visible to ths naked eye In fact, so large are. these wriggling anlmalculae that Americans re fer to them as "alligators." When there k,.,a .jfltaMht ajid,.. clsterjna are .dry boys peddle cans of 'water about the streets, the supply generally coming from a large cistern constructed by an Amert- can company which erected a brewery and operated it a few months. Just below the castle, on the point at the mouth of the Ozama ' River, Is the tower, unimpaired by age, where Colum bus spent so many weary hours. It it tali and dreary looking, th windows are barely large enough to permit a ray 'of ugnt to enter, and the inner walls ar 1 ugti M.M.Aurj.y..-A..iong wau. riina arouno It, and this contains the barracks of the army of today. Washington Star'. . THE PENGUIN'S BUMP fP LOCALITY. On shore the penguin is an "awkward creature. Water is its element. When uuuieu uii me ice noes, tne Diras gen erally trf to run away in an upright po. sltion, but just as the hunter thinks he has got one, the bird lies down on it white belly and paddles along: over the snow very quickly, the hard smooth quills slipping over the snow crystals al most without friction. A remarkable characteristic of the penguin Is his' bump of locality. Both on shore and m th water, he never loses his way. To hu man eyes one Jce flow Is precisely Ilk another, but under that roof of similar ice flows I have seen a penguin of the larger species find its mate r on a floe after diving and swimming for a full mile under water. Leslie's.- . ' , - : 1 THE LARGE8T TREE, ' ', John Mulr, the famoua naturalist and 6X20reLf .th!wP'flc "Iop n" oJC0r- t w 8 enenU Grnt National Park, Preano County, Cal.. that surpasses in measurements any of Its 1antlo n- gaiter. . drawn tight .over the solid, ate of the Sequoia group. It is p feet Lare-toed, heavUy naUed hoes; a dl ln circumference. - V I ...a . h. , the other CROWNV-. , ( I QueerT Helena, of Italy, haa written a I poem, which Is to appear ahortly In the German review, "Berliner Leben. Jt Is entitled "The Other Crown." . and gives th reverse of the medal ;f royalty, as j uauaiiT aeea pr fiQUlar ayav . in this hour when Oristiaa Bcienc Is being- given, mere, or less .prominence in the pubUs'' press, -it msy be of Interest to the readers of Th' Journal u know something of thm history. accompllsh- ments and. mission "of tht. rnMi mrm'. I ing-denomination. - ' In the year 171 the first CbrtstiaD Science Church was established by the Rev Mary Baker O. Eddy In Boston with twenty-six members.' This church is known "Th First Church of Christ. Scientist." or th "Mother Church" of the denomination. At this date, but 13 years later there are, in this country and abVoad m incorporated branch churches of this J'Mother Church," and US unin corporated societies holding regular ser vices, making-a total of .719 branch or- ranlsations. Kin. new churches and tour I ti..-. - ... . , . . .. month'f September, - during ths . Th MsmbersMp. T Membership ot the "Mother Church", is made up of Christian Scien tists from all over the world and in June of the present year numbered 84,415, mi new members navjng been added during the year. At the, recent annual meeting In Boston it was unanimously decided by vote of th 6000 or .more members present to contribute any portion of 12,000,000 that may be necessary to provide an auditor lum having a seating capacity of from 4000 to 5000 to meet th growing need ot he church. The remarkable growth shown by this comparatively new Christian ' denomina tion has Impressed with respect even those' indifferent to its teachings and has forced the conclusion that 'suet results are certainly not the outcome of a doc trine devoid of rationality and truth, and it la granted that a religion so earnestly endorsed, adhered, to and . auppcmd by these thousands of men and women, of at least average intelligence, la certanly worthy of the 3odspeed of humanity. Endless Misrepresentation. In the past because of misstatement and misconception. Christian Science has had to endure a generous share of oppo sition jiriUism,httt,thjs jxftWt .feWK. gives Indication of an enlightened break ing down of these conditions and those who have demonstrated even in a degree the practical worth and Christian purity of this Science are confidently willing to abide th ancient Scriptural text of Gamaliel prescribed for the early Chris tions: "If this counsel or this work be of men, it will come to nought; but if it be of God,' ye cannot overthrow it; lest haply ye be found even to fight against God." It is not expected nor is it the purpose of Christian Science to supplant Chris tianity 'as accepted by the world, but its whole effort Is to render Christian teach ing more practical and health-giving that it may meet the need of humanity by providing a sure means of relief from the distreBs.of disease as well as. ot aln, -Practical Aspect. , TJ. Jr?.!tLeJ-a4vnjLwinect Ot Christian Science Is well illustrated by the fact that the death rat among tho members of the "Mother Church" in Bos ton during the year ending June, , 1902, was but 132 per 1000. This, showing la BOYS IN BATTLE. It is Inevitable, now the South African war Is ended, that there should be a superabundance of reminiscences of men whowook nart in it. Th accounts that D3 ar0j mor strangely. books, Philip Plenaar of the Trans vaaV. Tele- Pffitjtuiiu norror ana nu- blended, wj? 01 "With Steyn and D?"' D graphic service, contains this brief i'e1ieTinUiKJJortal8- They -j married, "I went to see my brother, who was after a thorTou . wh.n h i,. stationed at Pepworth Hill, aome six miles to our right. " He belonged to the artillery cadets, who at the beginning ot the - war had been distributed amongst the various guns in order to give them practical experience. "Of the four that were attached to his gun,' two had already been wounded, it was glorious to see thete lads of 15 and IS dally withstanding the onalaught ot the mighty naval guna The rocka around their howitzer wer torn by lyddite, and STOund strs-sjs frtta- s!jraptj -Bet. ' " The British say we are trained Ger man gunners. Quite a compliment to Germany said on youngster, laughing. '"And I,' said- another. Inflating his chest, 'am a French or Russian expert. Dear me, how we have surprised them!' "' A severe thunderstorm now. broke over head. They had no tents, and had to find shelter as best they could under tarpau- jJn, 8trtched between the rocka Theae were, indeed, the children of th Dutch remibUc.Waahinson Btar. ACTIVE SEAL POACHING Russia does not find It an eaay matter to preserve her seal fisheries, although she adopted drastic measures . for that purpose. Since the wholesale slaughter of .eai, ,n the waters about tne Prlbllof islands by poachers it has been more profitable- to hunt far seals on ths Siber ian Coast. Russia gave notice that per sona caught poaching in her maritime ; Jurisdiction would be Imprisoned for three months and their vessels and cargoes confiscated. Three ' fast gunboats were sent to patrol the Siberian Coast with In structions to sink any vessel that refused to surrender. But all these, precautions have not. It appears, succeeded: In' stop ping the so-called poaching. Philadel phia Press. ;- ' -r.,. : . THE FRENCH PRE8IDENT. 'President Loubet of France "Papa EmUe," as he ' ! familiarly called has been hunting in the famous forests ot Ramboulllet and Mardy, once the hunting grounds of kings. ; On who saw him there recently describes him in this way: Rifle m hand; plp0 to mouth, wearing an old w,,. - Mt w.h hi. .ton w.iin. MlNuucy, caa; ulmms wi .... v n . , Dlcturesaue disorder on his head, he looks more lik a benevolent poacher than a President ; - ' ; CATCH THEM ON FOOT. X man doesn't have to have an auto mobile tn order to run down his nelgh-bora.-J'hflgdslphla .Seoord, : r . . . , unusual when it la -remembered that the majority of th membership is composed of those -iwho have- sought ; Christian Science in ill-health and that th death rat among policy holders of th leading, lnaurahos conapaaiea is from to D) per joooT ,;. ,.;'- ,;Vw .k;v-' ... :A concise-definition of Christian Science is given in th Standard Dictionary as "a system of moral and religious Instruc tion founded upon principles formulated by Rev. Mary Baker Q. Eddy (1866) and. combined with a method of treating dis ease mentally.. At presented In Mrs, Ed dy's Bclenc and Health' Christian Sel ene is based on Ihe -teachings ot Scrip ture which it interprets, giving the Christ prinoiple and - rule In Divine metaphysics which heals ths sick and sinner. It ex plain all- caxtse-?andV" effect as-mesial, and shows the scientific relation of man to God." , Ths Founder. In conectlon with this statement of Christian Science It will be of Interest to know; something of the life and char acter of th ntoble woman through whose effort It has been' founded, and this is most ably given In the remarks of Judge Septimus J, Hahna in a lecture recently delivered in Chicago. ! Judge Hanna said: "Mrs. Eddy la at once the discoverer and tha founder of Christian Science. She discovered for herselj the great fact that God had healed her of a.aieknesa, the result of an accident which, ' according to all ordinary evidence, had placed her at the very door of death. This may be said to have been her original discovery, This aroused within her a burning desire to know how God had. healed her, and alao to Impart to others the knowledge of how .the sick are healed. This led her to search tho Scripture that she might And the healing principle. She pursued her search until she found the healing Principle to be God. , She proved this by hearing .all manner of diseases, and she proved as well that the same understanding- of God which healed sickness also destroyed sln, Having to found and proved th healing and saving principle. she proceeded to teach others, to found A . CjQdftm- tor teaching this heallntr ys tern, to found periodicals for its propa gation, to found a church wherein the healing Gospel could be preached and expounded through public services; and she adopted, from time to time, such other propaganda as became necessary to the establishment of a healing and sav ing religion. That such a system has been successfully established I need not say, for It Is a matter of common knowl edge. Thus I say, Mrs. Eddy Is both discoverer and a founder. Her Instructor. "And what of the life and character of on who has accomplished so much' I am sure a few words in reference to these will be welcomed by every sincere inquirer. i "Born amid the beautiful but rugged hills of. Bow,., sjear--Concord1,' If. a., tt sterling and strictly religious parents, de tcertflfid from a.JLong.Une of jaracthy-aisd dHatlngulthed ancestors of Scotch and English blood. Mrs. Eddy was favored by nature and nature's God. with advantages which fitted her for swatuture great car eer. Her early environments were such &he New Program Down at Smith's r Smith and his wife,. Charlotte, tfe?e both only been out of school a couple of months. Smith had .followed his Drofes ston so assiduously that he had given no thought to the subject of matrimony, until he began to learn by experience. Charlotte-or Lottie, as she had come to be called knew no more of the great. wiae world than an angel from heaven. so she, too, was learning many of the harrowing details of wedlock by expert ence. ' ..... wmte oeara, cowing locks that envelope his face and form, sandaled feet, a staff in ft island, a girdle about his waist and a look in his eyes to steadfast and un faltering that wo are not afraid when he takes us by the hand. But our faith fails us at times, when he heads toward the Jesert. The way la rough. The sands are Diistenng. The sun is mercilessly not. we try to pull away and tarn back. But his hand -closet upon ours with a clasp so gentle, yet so masterful, that . w.e.. M.e.LE.!iT,..MSana upon our bruised feet"," hoping to" come upon a path soon, worn smooth by the marcnlng millions who have preceded us. Smith and his wife had a few well founded ideals and one th,at both agreed upon was that married people could "get along.". . - They were now trying-. . "Lottie, your mother was a frugal, in dustrious woman, who was not worried by the little things of .life. Why, I im agined that her system of keeping house was so perfect that nothing ruffled her,' Smith was saying, as. they discussed the increasing grocery bill. ' "Phllanderr th 6nlynphiceyou knew my mother was In the parlor. . You never went over th account with her. Tou saw her smiling and pleasant, and didn't know that under her most affable smile, she was thinking that the coal bin was empty, the potatoes 'out and that two pairs of pants most be . patched before school Monday "morning, "' I want to say that , keeping house Sunday . evening, in an easy chair, is quite different from keeping house tn the kitchen, in the mid dle of the week." -" ; v . . "Oh, I expected tome excuse, 'N Smith replied ' without looking up from his paper. ' . ;;'':-'v "I am not hunting tor an' excuse. I have no excuse to oiler. Facta are facts. But you either don't know them when you see them, or won't recognise them." she snapped at him. "My experience is perhaps equal to your, and in the matter of judgment " : "Now. Smith, don't, don't; if you knowJ so much, tall taa Aunejjtfng. Don t critic as to nurture and -enlarge her inherited gifts. ' She was a student by natural bent and Intuition, This native trend was ' strengthened y by careful training in schools and academies,' as well as by competent private' tutors, among whom with her brother, Albert Baker, a gradu-. at of -Dartmouth College, and a dlsttn guisbed lawyer and member of Congress elect, he having died,;' after a short ill ness, before taking his seat.--; -.'. " "Among her other instructors weir such well known educators as Mrs. Sarah Bodwell Lane, Mr. Corser of Sanbornton Bridge Academy, and Professor Dyes H. Banbonj, author of Sanborn's grammar. This early training has been supplements ed by long years of careful and thorough research and study. Poetry was withr her a natural gift; - As-af youog girl-sh wrols. poems of such merit' that tftey were much sought for and published in newspapers and magaslnes. She was also a-prosa' essayist of distinction long before she began her labors as a Christian bclentist In evidence of this I make mention of a single circumstance: During Mrs. Eddy's . residence in the South, as the wife of the late Colonel George W. Glover, " of Charleston, S. C, she' wrote much for Southern magazines. Upon her return to . the North, after the death of Colonel Glover, her reputation as a writer bad become so wide that the Rev. Albert Case, then editor of the Odd Fellows' Magasine, offered her a salary of X3000 per year to become a regular contributor to his periodicals. At that time this was a large salary for literary workv and speaks strongly of th estimate put upon Mrs. Eddy's literary ability. Bhe has studied deeply in many of th higher branches of learning and In general lite rature. She is, from every point of view, a woman of sound education and liberal culture. ; From Personal Knowledge. "Ijt may not be amiss for m to say that x for-nearly ten years, as First Reader la the Mother Church in Boston and editor ot the official periodicals, I have had op portunities which enable me to tpeak In telligently of Mrs. Eddy's life and charac ter as weir a of her labors and Uterary! qualities. 'Speaking from this vantageground. It can truthfully say "that, intellectually. she is, without exception, the most acuta and alert person I have ever seen: that she labors incessantly and unselfishly for the cause to which she has devoted her life, and .that, notwithstanding her years. she performs an amount of labor each day which, if known, would seem incredi ble, even If done by one yet in the adol escence of life. As to her religious char acter, I speak my profoundest conviction when I say that I believe it to be as near ly Christlike as is possible to a denlsen of this earth. I cannot conceive how a ner- sor. on this plane of existence could walk more closely with God or exemplify a more exalted Christian life. ' " '" . And dortat Ttfte wonderful' 'results of her work, even thus far, prove thlsT To those, familiar with them they most as- suredly do. To the many thousands ay over the globe who are "the conscious beneficiaries of her work, she has in deed proved hersef to be a religious fe foimer and a Christian evangel." By Sort Huff man. S 01110 Philosophy for Married Peopot else all the time. Instruct me Just a. little," said the wife, holding out herj hands, as if she would push him lntd, the next county. "If instruction were possible " ha said with Increasing coolness. But she had gone to answer a ring at the ball door. V Smith sat looking at his paper, with out seeing It. Mrs. Smith had taken th visitor Into the parlor. . "This Is civilized society," he: tald to himself, with something like a lump In. his throat. -Returning-home.o diaaex, .ha fait th. . chill as soon as he entered the house. Dinner was finished -with no more words than necessary. As he waa preparing to go back to the office, his wife told him, aa gently as she could, under the tense strain of the mat rimonial machinery, that she was going to visit her aunt In the, city tor a few days. Smith thought it was. a separation, but when he saw that she didn't take her trunk he knew it was only a bluff; It was quite lonely at home that night The house seemed twice" as large as usuai. Smith could now think undisturbed. He found, by taking up th conjugal chart, that he was drifting away from his wife and he was drifting- In an op posite direction. - Or they were at anchor on opposite shores; of the matrimonial sea.' ' BeCg a reasonable man, under ordl nary circumstances, h said to himself that this state of affairs would hot do. He wondered why Lottie didn't look at things at he did. Then he thought again that may be he should look at things as Lottie did. But the strong instinct ot leadership called him back hurriedly front that point of view. The more he thought th more lonely he became. Finally, about midnight, he came to himself and found that he was steaming back across the sea that separated themg to where Lottie was anchored. . . ' He took ofat his dairy and wrote In It. What ' he wrote no one but himself knew for several happy years. In rummaging among, old keepsakes on a closet shelf one day Mrs. Smith found) the old diary and it opened where a leaf ' was turned down. On the opposite page . she read: "The New Program takes ef fect - today. When Lottie . comes home she can attend to her business and I wQl attend to mine." -- --. . By referring to daces sacred to th fans 11 y history she found It was written oa the" day she went on that visit. She had often wondered during those intervening years If ah or Smith had conquered, a... ; ;. . . Hi